The greatest recordings of piano sound

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  • richardfinegold
    Full Member
    • Sep 2012
    • 7667

    #16
    [QUOTE=gradus;438779]So often piano sound is ill-served by recording engineers and the instrument fails to sound as we might like it to. Occasionally though piano recordings can sound magnificent and almost give the impression of the instrument being in the room with you. Of course there is no necessary connection between great piano sound and a great performance but occasionally they coincide although disappointingly, they often don't.
    This train of thought was occasioned by listening to a magnificent piano recording by Helene Grimaud of the Brahms third sonata streamed over Spotify, a recording that dates from 1992 but isto my ears utterly extraordinary for the immediacy, power and natural sound of the piano - a fine performance too.
    Any other nominations for fine recorded piano sound?



    I think I have tha that Grimaud recording, burned to a HD. Will have to listen to it again.
    I agree with others that the Piano is a difficult instrument to record. To close and one can feel like one is overwhelmed, but cold an detached doesn't work either. Room reverberations should also be captured as well as the clacking noises one hears in a concert hall.
    I was listening to the Ingrid Flier Chopin Concerto disc yesterday. Great performances but a strange acoustic, as if the Piano is coming from a different space as the Orchestra.
    I think the RCA recordings of Artur Rubinstein from the 60s and 70s got it just right. It was harder to appreciate this thru the original noisy lps and initial poor CD transfers but subsequent remasterings have shown how fine the original recordings were.

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    • Eine Alpensinfonie
      Host
      • Nov 2010
      • 20570

      #17
      At the opposite end of the scale, has anyone heard the CBS Gary Graffman recording of Tchaikovsky's Piano Concertos 2 & 3. What brittle piano sound (but great performances).

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      • kea
        Full Member
        • Dec 2013
        • 749

        #18
        Virtually every piano recording I listen to has satisfactory sound. Maybe I'm just not picky enough.

        (Exceptions include some of the 'historical' recordings: Nat box, Katchen Brahms box, early bits of the Anda box, Kempff Schumann... plus a few uncommonly badly-recorded modern recordings, possibly recorded in a bathtub or underwater, e.g. Lyatoshynsky on some obscure Ukrainian label, Stewart Goodyear's Beethoven on Marquis)

        The most recent case where I found occasion to remark on the superior quality of the piano sound was in listening to Tharaud's Satie on HM. Of course some of that's Tharaud himself and his concern for tone. No idea how much Studio Magic contributed.

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